Q & A With Rodelio Aglibot: In-N-Out R & D, Filipino Food + No Kobe Beef Burger in Kobe Bryant Land

rodelio1.jpg
A. Scattergood
chef Rodelio Aglibot at GO Burger

As this town's burger addicts are well-aware, GO Burger recently opened in Hollywood, dangerously near The Hungry Cat and the home of the Pug Burger. The man flipping burgers (actually sometimes, conceptually a lot more often) at GO Burger is none other than Rodelio Aglibot, a man who had spent no small amount of time in other Los Angeles restaurants before becoming, last year, the corporate executive chef of BLT Restaurant Group. And thus of GO Burger, which would perhaps have been called BLT Burger were it not for the fact that Laurent Tourondel has left that building.

Aglibot, who is Filipino-American, was the opening chef at Koi, but is probably far better known as the chef-owner of Yi Cuisine, perhaps the only upscale Filipino restaurant Los Angeles has ever had. Had, past tense, as the restaurant closed in 2006. (If you want a fun party game, and can't wait to read the actual interview, just Google Aglibot, Jonathan Gold and Spam.)

We sat down with Aglibot recently at GO Burger. Amid the controlled chaos of opening a restaurant, there was no mistaking Aglibot's pleasure at being back in Los Angeles. Of course maybe that was because Chicago, where he has been based and where he opened Sunda restaurant, was in the process of being buried under a near-historic amount of snow. If you could open a restaurant in L.A. this time of year, wouldn't you? Exactly. Turn the page...

Squid Ink: So welcome back to L.A.

Rodelio Aglibot: It's good to be home. It is a home for me: I spent 16 years of my life here.

SI: When was the last time you were here, professionally?

RA: I left when I sold my share of Yi Cuisine, on 3rd and Fairfax, in 2006. And then I was the consulting chef at The Huntley until the end of '06, and then I had a project in Seattle, so I moved up there in the beginning of '07. So pretty much I relocated myself outside of Los Angeles in '06.

SI: And your previous incarnation here? We're going backwards...

RA: I was the opening chef at Koi, yep. The first two years. And then my own restaurant, Yi Cuisine. Then I consulted on Sushi on Sunset when it first reopened; consulted on Blowfish; consulted on Simon L.A. with Kerry [Simon]. Consulted at
The Huntley in Santa Monica. Consulted on quite a few other restaurants. But you know, a lot of my chef friends are here. I have a ravioli business based out of Burbank. It's called Baba's Pasta, it's artisan pasta. Right now we're sold at Santa Monica Seafood. I also import vanilla beans; Chef's Warehouse is our distributor locally. A small company we have is based out of Huntington Beach. So my Los Angeles roots are strong. And being corporate executive chef at BLT now brings me back to Los Angeles -- not as much as I want it to -- but on a more regular basis.

SI: How long have you been corporate executive chef at BLT?

RA: About 9 months now. But I had a consulting contract with them for a year.

SI: Okay, tell us about GO Burger.

RA: BLT Burger has 2 locations: one in New York and one in Vegas. Here we're creating a broader restaurant experience. We do have burgers -- our Angus burgers, dry-aged beef burgers -- but here we have entrees as well. We also offer some non-meat dishes for those who don't eat hamburgers. We have a great falafel burger on the menu. A salmon salad. A great kid's menu: the gratuitous fish sticks, and we have baby sliders. And so it's a full service. We also have a great milkshake and beverage program; we have spiked milkshakes with alcohol in them. It's sort of like an updated throwback burger joint. But these menus are chef-driven. We don't have kitchen managers; we have a chef de cuisine [Kayson Chong].

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A. Scattergood
fries at GO Burger

SI: Wasn't there a contest to come up with the name?

RA: Yeah, there was. We're moving forward as a company, going into the next era. So there was a contest last year to rename the concept, and GO Burger was the winner.

SI: You've been cooking in different places for awhile...

RA: I've been around. I've been in almost every major city now: San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, New York. And now with the BLT group it comes back full circle, I'm going back to those cities -- with the exception of San Francisco, as there's no property there.

SI: I was going to ask you about food trends. Burgers and spiked milkshakes seem to be trending upwards, so to speak.

RA: I think that they are trending upwards. I think there's two approaches. From a business standpoint, burgers will never go out of style. They're easily executable and people will go there. And so I think that creating concepts where you get a higher ticket average might be in the play. With spiked milkshakes and all the great sides, now we can get a higher ticket average. So it makes more sense. And we have a full liquor license. Because even in fine dining restaurants, you put a burger on the menu, it sells.

SI: The same with spaghetti. What's up with that?

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Go Burger

6290 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, CA

Category: Restaurant

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